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Mental Health

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Title: Mental Health


1
Mental Health
  • Impacts on Child Development
  • Jacqui Van Horn, MPH, IMH-E
  • jacquivanhorn_at_comcast.net

2
(No Transcript)
3
Co-creating Mental Health
4
Early Childhood Mental Health
  • Begins before birth
  • Inextricably connected to
  • The health (physical, mental, spiritual) of the
    parents
  • All other areas of health and development
  • Is formative and provides the basic structure
    within which all development unfolds throughout
    our lives.

5
Across the Lifespan . . .
  • Human relationships, and the effects of
    relationships on relationships, are the building
    blocks of healthy development.
  • From the moment of conception to the finality of
    death, intimate and caring relationships are the
    fundamental mediators of successful human
    adaptation.
  • (From Neurons to Neighborhoods, p. 27)

6
Mentally healthy people . . .
  • Experience, express, respond to and manage a full
    range of emotions in ways that support their
    ability to function across contexts and settings
  • Their own emotions and
  • The emotions of others.
  • Successfully engage in a range of relationships
    with others within a range of social contexts.
  • Can recognize and repair disruptions in
    relationships.

7
Irreducible Needs
  • Ongoing, nurturing relationships
  • Physical protection, safety and regulation
  • Experiences that are developmentally appropriate
    and tailored to individual differences
  • Limit setting, structure and expectations
  • Stable, supportive communities and cultural
    continuity

  • (Brazelton Greenspan, 2000)

8
Needs Vulnerabilities
  • Ongoing, nurturing relationships
  • Physical protection, safety and regulation
  • Experiences that are developmentally appropriate
    and tailored to individual differences
  • Limit setting, structure and expectations
  • Stable, supportive communities and cultural
    continuity
  • (Brazelton Greenspan, 2000)
  • Chronic stress
  • Emotionally unavailable caregivers
  • Maltreatment
  • Foster Care
  • Homelessness
  • Domestic Violence
  • Drug and alcohol exposure

9
Development is Impacted
  • Brain development is impacted by stress.
  • Babies experience (and remember) stress when
  • Their signals are not responded to sensitively
  • Their attachment figure does not help them feel
    safe and cared for
  • Their attachment figure is not physically or
    emotionally available to them

National Clearinghouse on Child Abuse and Neglect
Information
10
Healthy Child Neglected Child Both
size and functioning of the brain are impacted.
11
Development is Impacted
  • The brain organizes itself to support survival in
    either a positive environment OR a negative
    environment.
  • The early organizational structures continue to
    influence behavior and development over time.

National Clearinghouse on Child Abuse and Neglect
Information
12
Impacts of Trauma
  • Structural changes occur to the brain
  • Less brain mass
  • Less brain tissue connecting the hemispheres
  • Neuronal pathways become over-sensitized
  • Areas of the brain involved with fear/anxiety
    responses can become over-developed other areas
    are then under-developed
  • When the brains resources are focused on
    survival, other aspects of development suffer
    the child has fewer resources available for
    learning.
  • These physiological changes are associated with
    changes in cognitive functioning

National Clearinghouse on Child Abuse and Neglect
Information
13
Many Wake Up! Calls
  • High rates of maltreated infants, toddlers and
    young children present with significant physical,
    cognitive, social-emotional, relational and
    psychological problems.
  • Most children placed in foster care have a
    history of severe neglect or abuse and have
    experienced significant stress during critical
    periods of early brain development.
  • Shaw,
    E. and Goode, S. (2008)

14
Many Wake Up! Calls
  • Young children in foster care have higher rates
    of chronic health conditions and special needs
    than national estimates for children living at
    home.
  • Very young children exposed to domestic violence
    may experience extreme stress that can have a
    potentially serious impact on brain development.
  • Homeless children are twice as likely to
    experience learning disabilities and three times
    as likely to experience an emotional disturbance
    as other children. Shaw, E. and
    Goode, S. (2008)

15
Stay Awake!
Approximately 10-15 of all typically
developing preschool children have chronic
mild to moderate levels of behavior problems.
Children who are poor are much more likely to
develop behavior problems with prevalence rates
that approach 30. Children who are identified
as hard to manage at ages 3 and 4 have a high
probability of continuing to have difficulties
into adolescence.
Center for Evidence Based Practice Young
Children with Challenging Behavior
www.challengingbehavior.org
16
Still Awake?
  • Behavior problems in a childs preschool career
    are the single best predictor of delinquency in
    adolescence, gang membership, and adult
    incarceration.
  • If challenging behaviors are not altered by the
    end of the third grade, it appears that they
    should be treated as a chronic condition
    hopefully kept somewhat in check by continuing
    and ever more costly intervention.

Center for Evidence Based Practice Young
Children with Challenging Behavior
www.challengingbehavior.org
17
Looking Ahead
  • Children who grow into adolescence with
    challenging behaviors are likely to drop out of
    school, be arrested, abuse drugs and alcohol,
    have marginalized adult lives, and die young.
  • There is evidence to show that young children
    with challenging behavior are more likely to
    experience
  • early and persistent peer rejection
  • mostly punitive contacts with teachers
  • family interaction patterns that are unpleasant
    for all participants
  • school failure
  • high risk of fatal accidents, substance abuse,
    divorce, unemployment, psychiatric illness, and
    early death

Center for Evidence Based Practice Young
Children with Challenging Behavior
www.challengingbehavior.org
18
Looking Back

Felitti VJ, Anda RF, Nordenberg D, Williamson DF,
Spitz AM, Edwards V, Koss MP, et al JS. The
relationship of adult health status to childhood
abuse and household dysfunction. American
Journal of Preventive Medicine. 199814245-258.
19
Adverse Childhood Experiences
  •  Emotional Abuse
  •  Physical Abuse
  •  Sexual Abuse
  • Emotional Neglect
  •  Physical Neglect
  • Mother Treated Violently
  •  Household Substance Abuse
  •  Household Mental Illness
  •  Parental Separation or Divorce
  •  Incarcerated Household Member

http//www.cdc.gov/nccdphp/ace/findings.htm
20
ACE Study Basics
  • The ACE Study is the largest study of its kind
    ever conducted (more than 17,000 study
    participants) and the range of adverse childhood
    experiences and health related outcomes studied
    was unprecedented.
  • An unexpectedly high number of adults who came to
    the Department of Preventive Medicine for
    comprehensive medical screening had experienced
    significant abuse or household dysfunction during
    their childhoods (only 1/3 reported no ACEs).

http//www.cdc.gov/nccdphp/ace/findings.htm
21
ACE Study Findings
  • ACEs were not only unexpectedly common, but their
    effects were found to be cumulative.
  • As the ACE score increased the chances of being a
    user of street drugs, tobacco or having problems
    with alcohol abuse increased in a stepwise
    fashion.
  • As the ACE score increased the number of risk
    factors for the leading causes of death increased.

http//www.cdc.gov/nccdphp/ace/findings.htm
22
ACE Scores have demonstrated
  • As the number of ACE increase, the risk for the
    following health problems increases in a strong
    and graded fashion
  • alcoholism and alcohol abuse
  • chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD)
  • depression
  • fetal death
  • health-related quality of life
  • illicit drug use
  • ischemic heart disease (IHD)
  • liver disease
  • risk for intimate partner violence
  • multiple sexual partners
  • sexually transmitted diseases (STDs)
  • smoking
  • suicide attempts
  • unintended pregnancies

http//www.cdc.gov/nccdphp/ace/findings.htm
23
  • Those with an ACE score of 4 or more were
  • Twice as likely to be smokers,
  • 12 times more likely to have attempted suicide,
  • 7 times more likely to be alcoholic, and
  • 10 times more likely to have injected street
    drugs.
  • (compared to score of 0)
  • The behaviors such as alcohol or drug abuse,
    smoking, or sexual promiscuity are likely the
    result of the effects of ACEs on childhood
    development, which we now know to be
    neurodevelopmental in nature.

http//www.cdc.gov/nccdphp/ace/findings.htm
24
  • Adverse childhood experiences would typically go
    undetected because of shame, secrecy and social
    taboo.

25
The fallout from various forms of child abuse
household dysfunction is monumental,
  • costing Americans untold sums of money because
    of the health risks such as the use of street
    drugs, tobacco, alcohol, overeating and sexual
    promiscuity. Not the least of these high-ticket
    medical costs is due to cardiovascular disease,
    cancer, AIDS and other sexually transmitted
    diseases, unwanted often-high-risk pregnancies,
    chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, and a
    legacy of self-perpetuating child abuse.

26
Early Childhood Mental Health
Promotion
Preventive Intervention
Treatment
27
ECMH Promotion
  • A population-based strategy that highlights the
    necessity for predictable, nurturing, sensitive
    caregiver-child interactions
  • Public Awareness
  • Universal screening systems that
  • Systematically address all developmental issues,
    including social and emotional development and
  • Are conducted in collaboration with parents and
    other primary caregivers and seen as informative
    and supportive and
  • Result in appropriate supports, referrals and
    interventions.

28
Opportunities to Promote Nurturing Interactions
  • Well Child Visits
  • WIC
  • Early Care and Education Settings
  • Child Care
  • Early Head Start Head Start
  • Universal Home Visiting Services
  • IDEA, Part C Programs
  • Others?!

29
Pitfalls of Developmental Screening
  • Waiting until a problem is observable
  • Ignoring screening results
  • Relying on informal methods
  • Using a measure that is not suitable
  • Assuming services are limited or nonexistent
  • www.dbpeds.org/articles/detail.cfm?TextID5

30
For More Information
  • Facts about Developmental Screening Tools
  • http//www.cdc.gov/ncbddd/child/tools.htm
  • Developmental screening and assessment
    instruments with an emphasis on social and
    emotional development for young children ages
    birth through five.
  • www.nectac.org/pdfs/pubs/screening.pdf
  • Early Identification/Developmental
    Screeninghttp//www.aap.org/healthtopics/early.cf
    m
  • Pediatric Developmental Screening Understanding
    and Selecting Screening Instruments
    http//www.commonwealthfund.org/publications/publi
    cations_show.htm?doc_id614864

31
Screen . . . and then what?
  • Identify community resources
  • Identify service accessibility and availability
    challenges
  • Collaborate . . . start with what is work
    toward good enough . . . (for now) and
    collaborate to achieve a high quality system of
    caring for all children and families.

32
Supporting Mental Health to Positively Impact
Child Development
33
jacquivanhorn_at_comcast.net
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